Long Beach, CA
File #: 17-0288    Version: 1 Name: DS - Wayfinding Signage
Type: Agenda Item Status: Approved
File created: 4/3/2017 In control: City Council
On agenda: 4/18/2017 Final action: 4/18/2017
Title: Recommendation to receive and file a report and presentation on the development of a comprehensive wayfinding signage program, including City gateway entry signs, directional signs for public parking, and coastal access signs. (Citywide)
Sponsors: Development Services
Indexes: Report
Attachments: 1. 041817-R-17sr.pdf, 2. 041817-R-17 TFF Memo.pdf, 3. 041817-R-17 PowerPoint.pdf
TITLE
Recommendation to receive and file a report and presentation on the development of a comprehensive wayfinding signage program, including City gateway entry signs, directional signs for public parking, and coastal access signs. (Citywide)

DISCUSSION
As part of the Fiscal Year 2016 budget process, the need for updating and replacing major gateway signage for entrances into the City was identified. Additionally, the need for a comprehensive wayfinding signage program that would include wayfinding for public parking structures and coastal access was also identified. City staff issued a request for proposals (RFP), and selected Selbert Perkins Design (Consultant) to create a signage program that establishes a uniform design theme for new signs in the public realm.

On August 23, 2016, the Consultant presented to the City Council an update on their work with an interdepartmental City team on the design of the wayfinding signage and a comprehensive public outreach effort. The public outreach process was undertaken in the fall of 2016 by the Consultant and staff and involved stakeholder meetings with Downtown Long Beach Associates (DLBA), business groups, business improvement districts, community advocacy groups, as well as an online survey.

The online survey was widely distributed to neighborhood organizations and the public, and was designed to get feedback on respondents’ perceptions of the City, their primary destinations in the City, and how they got around the City, i.e., on foot, by car, by transit, or other. More than 700 persons responded to the online survey and, as intended, their feedback laid a foundation for the concepts considered by the Consultant in designing a wayfinding signage program that fully embraces the community’s values and identity. The survey also captured the type of words used to describe the City, which included responses such as progressive, diverse, active, and culturally-enriching.

The Consultant’s initial design work on ...

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